“The math is as simple as the moral claim.” A long thread on climate justice, historical emissions, and what an honest reckoning with them means for, and demands morally from, the wealthy nations of the world. (1/x) nymag.com/intelligencer/…
“We know how much carbon has been emitted and by which countries, which means we know who is most responsible and who will suffer most and that they are not the same.”
“We know that the burden imposed on the world’s poorest by its richest is gruesome, that it is growing, and that it represents a climate apartheid demanding reparation — or should know it.”
“Carbon dioxide is a gas, but doesn’t dissipate immediately like viral aerosols in the wind. It accumulates, thickening the atmosphere for centuries, which means that all the carbon added to the skies since the advent of industrialization is still heating the planet today…”
“…and will be for ages to come, turning the Earth we have known into one we don’t.”
“Warming is often described as an ecological crisis. But there is another way to conceive of it: as a moral catastrophe, engineered by the sheltered nations of the global North, and suffered by those, in the global South, least responsible for it and least prepared.”
“The rich are rich today because of development powered by fossil fuels; the poorest today are those who have produced practically none of that pollution.”
The greatest climate cleavage is not between liberals and environmentalists, on one side, and conservatives and Big Oil, on the other; but between North and South, rich and poor, the guilty and the damned.
“But the atmosphere is as indifferent to the location of emissions as it is to motive; what matters is the tally of damage.”
“Climate policy concerns itself primarily with future emissions trajectories: what can be done. But we have a climate crisis in all its urgency and brutality now because of legacy emissions: what has been done.”
“What has been done is this: Sixty percent of all historical emissions were produced in the lifetime of the average American, who is 38. Almost 90 percent were produced in the lifetime of our president.”
“The Paris agreement of 2015 established a goal of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius. That goal implies a carbon budget. We have already spent 89 percent of it.”
“Today, as hundreds of millions still lack electricity in the global South, 80 percent of greenhouse-gas emissions are being produced by the countries of the G20.”
“Nearly half are produced by the world’s richest 10 percent, and a single transatlantic airline ticket yields one ton of CO2, more than the annual emissions of the average resident of sub-Saharan Africa.”
“One recent study suggested that every four Americans could, in their lifetime, produce enough carbon to kill one person living elsewhere on the planet.”
Responsibility is not distributed evenly within countries, with the rich and powerful far more to blame (especially those closest to the fossil fuel business and their strategies of denial and delay); and individuals mostly left to navigate a system beyond their control.
But responsibility is distributed even more unequally between nations, as is vulnerability.
“Wealth can enable decarbonization now, as well as better living and more security. With clean energy cheaper than dirty energy for 90 percent of the world, renewables are finally yielding viable dreams of global green prosperity.”
“But all of industrial history has been governed by a different pattern: Growth has meant emissions, and emissions have meant growth. The climate crisis is the result of that history, as is the wealth of nations.”
“Since 1850, when anthropogenic emissions essentially began, the U.S. has produced 509 gigatons of carbon dioxide. That is by far the most of any nation in the world, a fifth of the total, double the responsibility of any other nation and three times the country in third place.”
“China, the world’s second largest economy, has produced the second most, with 284 gigatons, only about half the American total, though it has three times as many people and is often vilified by Americans as the great climate scoundrel.”
If China honors its pledge to peak emissions by 2030, it will never reach the level of American per capita emissions in the same year. And almost no matter what happens this century, cumulative Chinese emissions will never even approach the US total—and American responsibility.
“In third place is Russia, with 173 gigs tons, followed by Brazil (113), Indonesia (103), Germany (89), India (86), the U.K. (75), Japan (67), and Canada (66).” The country that invented industrialization has produced about one sixth of the carbon damage as the U.S.
When American presidents and climate diplomats travel the world chastising other nations for failing to move fast enough on carbon, this is what the leaders of those nations are thinking about, in addition to our ongoing failure to deliver meaningful domestic climate policy,
“In the U.S., where the term reparations typically encompasses both historical and current racial injustice, actual tabulations can get tangled in the messy, though intuitive, relationship between the two.”
“When it comes to warming, you don’t have to calculate backward from climate damages, which are shrouded in uncertainty until disaster hits. Instead, you can work forward from the more hopeful principle of restoration.”
“That is the clarifying moral logic of climate reparations: One inarguable measure of responsibility for anything that’s been done is what it would take to undo it.”
“Now, technologies that can remove carbon dioxide from the air and begin to repair the climate do exist. We’re using them at infinitesimal scale, and staggering obstacles to their global implementation remain — but, usefully, these methods come with present-tense price tags.”
“Climeworks in Switzerland is charging about $600 a ton. Other ‘nature based’ approaches promise removal for as little as $10 per ton, though each has limitations and drawbacks.”
“There are skeptics of engineered approaches, too, but most scientists and researchers believe that, given investment and public support, at some point over the next decade or two, the price of extracting and storing carbon by scalable technique will fall to about $100 a ton.”
“An alternate method of tabulating damages is called the “social cost of carbon”; recently, economists Joseph Stiglitz and Nicholas Stern submitted that it was also $100 a ton.”
“From there, calculating the climate debt is just a matter of multiplication.”
“What is owed is this: by the U.S., $50 trillion; by China, about $30 trillion; by the U.K., $8 trillion. In total, the bill would come to $250 trillion, more than half of all the wealth that exists in the world today.”
“These figures are a provocation — naïve, like many moral propositions.”
“Carbon removal is not a one-click solution, as eager as the complacent consumers of the North are to believe in mirages of deliverance.”
“It is more like the work of a century, and a planet, and much easier to imagine when contemplating the problem before a whiteboard wiped clean of politics and resistance than when planning an intervention in the real world.”
“Reducing emissions by simple decarbonization — solar and wind and electric vehicles — is considerably cheaper. And talk of carbon removal puts the cart before the horse, since it would only be effective after a rapid transition to net-zero emissions.”
“But however naïve, the price of restoration is one way of calculating the climate debt imposed by certain people in certain places and times on other people in other places and times…”
“That is, it is a way of articulating the scale of the ecological and humanitarian crime we are watching unfold, often pretending we are not perpetrating it ourselves.”
“Working at the whiteboard, this would be the price of making it right.”

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More from @dwallacewells

1 Nov
“⁦@disharavii⁩ is 23. She was born in 1998 in Tiptur, India, where by 2050, in even a moderate-warming scenario, the number of days each year when temperatures reach a threshold of lethality is expected to approach 100.” (1/x) nymag.com/intelligencer/…
“A few hundred miles south, the number is expected to grow from about that level, where it already is today, well past 200.”
“We have the whole package of the climate crisis,” @disharavii Ravi tells me. “Like, name a disaster and we have it.”
Read 8 tweets
3 Oct
“A report from Greenpeace, based on statistics from Russian fire services, estimates that 65,000 square miles have burned — more than six times the area burned in the United States so far this year.” grist.org/wildfires/you-…
“At their peak, in August, 190 blazes were spreading across Sakha and Chukotka, Russia’s farthest northeastern regions.”
“In July and August, wildfires in northeastern Russia released 806 million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, according to a new report from Copernicus, the European Union’s satellite program.”
Read 4 tweets
28 Sep
"In assessing an individual’s risk of dying, age appears still as important—and maybe even more important—than vaccination status." Even in the age of vaccines and breakthroughs, age is a dominant, overlooked shaper of the pandemic. A long thread (1/x). nymag.com/intelligencer/…
In mid-September, King County, Washington released an eye-popping slide about vaccine efficacy: Vaccines had reduced the risk of infection from sevenfold and the risk of hospitalization and death 41-fold and 42-fold, respectively. pbs.twimg.com/media/E_Z_wfqV…
These ratios, though bigger than those found in other studies released in recent weeks, are nevertheless in line with an obvious emerging consensus in the data: Vaccines do clearly reduce transmission and dramatically reduce hospitalizations and deaths.
Read 49 tweets
27 Sep
“China is facing power issues on two fronts. Some provinces have ordered industrial cuts to meet emissions goals, while others are facing a lack of electricity as sky-high coal and natural gas costs cause generators to slow output amid high demand.” (1/x) bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
“Residents in several northern provinces have already been dealing with blackouts, while traffic lights being turned off are causing chaos on the roads in at least one major city.”
“Guangdong, a southern industrial hub with an economy bigger than Australia’s, is asking people to use natural light in homes and limit air-conditioner use after implementing big power cuts to factories.”
Read 10 tweets
21 Sep
“We have shown that the onset of partisan polarization occurs early in the life cycle with very little change thereafter. Today, high levels of in-group favoritism and out-group distrust are in place well before early adulthood.” (1/x) marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolu…
“In fact, our 2019 results suggest that the learning curve for polarization plateaus by the age of 11.”
“This is very unlike the developmental pattern that held in the 1970s and 1980s, when early childhood was characterized by blanket positivity toward authority figures and partisanship gradually intruded into the political attitudes of adolescents before peaking in adulthood.”
Read 7 tweets
7 Sep
In today's piece, @DLeonhardt makes the case for vaccines by usefully clarifying the risk of breakthrough infections (he estimates daily risk at 1-in-5,000). But he doesn't mention the equivalent risk for the unvaccinated (during Delta, probably 1-in-1,000). A short thread (1/x)
@DLeonhardt Five-fold is a meaningful reduction of risk, of course, though it is much less significant than the demonstrated effect of vaccines on hospitalization (last week, the CDC suggested in L.A. vaccinations had reduced those risks almost 30-fold). cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/7…
@DLeonhardt As @DLeonhardt implies, the vaccines are remarkably effective at their most important job, preventing severe disease, hospitalization, and death. They are by far our best tool in blunting the severity of the ongoing pandemic.
Read 7 tweets

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